Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ

@SergDort

Full stack vibe engineer. Journey before destination, tests before production.

Neverland ๊ฐ€์ž…์ผ ลžubat 2015
589 ํŒ”๋กœ์ž‰1.3K ํŒ”๋กœ์›Œ
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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ@SergDortยท
I built a small extension for @claudecode, @opencode, and Pi that plays @DOTA2 hero voice lines based on agent events - task complete, errors, permission prompts, session start. Even if you've never played Dota2, the lines are hilarious.
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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
This is what the most exciting about agentic programming for me tho. Turn an idea into a PoC has never been so easy. But building quality products and software still requires wast knowledge, experience and intuition.
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI

Peter Steinberger, creator of OpenClaw, on why AI agents still produce "slop" without human taste in the loop: "You can create code and run all night and then you have like the ultimate slop because what those agents don't really do yet is have taste." Peter is direct: raw capability without direction still produces mediocre output. "They are spiky smart and they're really good at things, but if you don't navigate them well, if you don't have a vision of what you're going to build, it's still going to be slop. If you don't ask the right questions, it's still going to be slop." Great AI-assisted work is defined by the human guiding it. @steipete describes his own creative process when starting a new project: "When I start a project, I have like this very rough idea what it could be. And as I play with it and feel it, my vision gets more clear. I try out things, some things don't work, and I evolve my idea into what it will become." Most people skip this part entirely, front-loading everything into a single prompt and wondering why the result feels hollow. "My next prompt depends on what I see and feel and think about the current state of the project." Each step informs the next. The work itself is the feedback loop. "But if you try to put everything into a spec up front, you miss this kind of human-machine loop. And then I don't know how something good can come out without having feelings in the loop โ€” almost like taste." The agentic trap is what happens when you remove yourself from the process too early.

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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
dex
dex@dexhorthyยท
You cannot outsource the thinking
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI

Peter Steinberger, creator of OpenClaw, on why AI agents still produce "slop" without human taste in the loop: "You can create code and run all night and then you have like the ultimate slop because what those agents don't really do yet is have taste." Peter is direct: raw capability without direction still produces mediocre output. "They are spiky smart and they're really good at things, but if you don't navigate them well, if you don't have a vision of what you're going to build, it's still going to be slop. If you don't ask the right questions, it's still going to be slop." Great AI-assisted work is defined by the human guiding it. @steipete describes his own creative process when starting a new project: "When I start a project, I have like this very rough idea what it could be. And as I play with it and feel it, my vision gets more clear. I try out things, some things don't work, and I evolve my idea into what it will become." Most people skip this part entirely, front-loading everything into a single prompt and wondering why the result feels hollow. "My next prompt depends on what I see and feel and think about the current state of the project." Each step informs the next. The work itself is the feedback loop. "But if you try to put everything into a spec up front, you miss this kind of human-machine loop. And then I don't know how something good can come out without having feelings in the loop โ€” almost like taste." The agentic trap is what happens when you remove yourself from the process too early.

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Miles AI Wizard
Miles AI Wizard@MilesDigitekยท
Pi's extension ecosystem maturing fast. MCP adapter + subagent delegation = real agentic workflows. But context window management remains the bottleneck.
Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ@SergDort

Been using Pi for few days now. And tbh I donโ€™t see a reason to comeback to Claude or Codex. The minimalistic setup is so nice. And so extensible that you can build any workflow imaginable. Here are the extensions I use. Most are built by @nicopreme lol. The guy is a machine! github.com/stars/sergdortโ€ฆ

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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
Been using Pi for few days now. And tbh I donโ€™t see a reason to comeback to Claude or Codex. The minimalistic setup is so nice. And so extensible that you can build any workflow imaginable. Here are the extensions I use. Most are built by @nicopreme lol. The guy is a machine! github.com/stars/sergdortโ€ฆ
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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
staysaasy
staysaasy@staysaasyยท
The degree to which you are awed by AI is perfectly correlated with how much you use AI to code.
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Thariq
Thariq@trq212ยท
New in Claude Code: /ultraplan Claude builds an implementation plan for you on the web. You can read it and edit it, then run the plan on the web or back in your terminal. Available now in preview for all users with CC on the web enabled.
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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
Aimar Haddadi
Aimar Haddadi@AdvicebyAimarยท
i can spot a grifter from miles away. so i digged into the code to figure out if this is legit or not. guess i was right. ben is a crypto founder who runs some weird bitcoin lending platform, i was pretty sure he knows absolutely nothing about ai and memory so i tracked down the repo myself since i was curious. his website says he likes to build ai powered products and train local ai models? sure man, 80% of your github repo's are bitcoin related stuff. only one ai related project came up you forked in 2024. mempalace has 10k github stars, more than 1k forks but only.. 7 commits ? apparently the best memory layer to date? no git author history, no account connected to whoever wrote the code of this codebase. it doesn't add up.. the account who pushed the original repo, named: aya-thekeeper, under aya-thekeeper/mempal got deleted right after the repo got published. you paid a random guy named lu to build this shit out for you. ( "Written by Lu (DTL) โ€” March 24, 2026. For: Ben." ) - benchmark md file. lu wrote the code. lu wrote the benchmarks. lu is nowhere in the readme. or mentioned in the github history? the git history then got squashed to one commit and published under milla jovovich? seriously? a actress? you say she is a great friend of yours, she has been building this project with you. she does this at night. yet she has.. 7 commits and only 2 active days in her entire github history? you paid an actress and a random guy to promote a product you know absolutely nothing about.
Ben Sigman@bensig

30 second explanation of the MemPalace by Milla Jovovich. By day sheโ€™s filming action movies, walking Miu Miu fashion shows, and being a mom. By night sheโ€™s coding. Sheโ€™s the most creative, brilliant, and hilarious person I know. Iโ€™m honored to be working with her on this projectโ€ฆ more to come.

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Thomas Ricouard
Thomas Ricouard@Dimillianยท
One of my favorite Codex skills is my macOS menu bar app + tuist scaffolding. It can one-shot a well-structured SwiftUI menu bar app for any use case with an easy-to-run build and run script that you can plug right into the Codex app. github.com/Dimillian/Skilโ€ฆ
Thomas Ricouard tweet media
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Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ
Serg Dort ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ@SergDortยท
I built a small extension for @claudecode, @opencode, and Pi that plays @DOTA2 hero voice lines based on agent events - task complete, errors, permission prompts, session start. Even if you've never played Dota2, the lines are hilarious.
English
1
1
3
679